Standardize settings file naming and relocate documentation files Fix code quality violations from rsx:check Reorganize user_management directory into logical subdirectories Move Quill Bundle to core and align with Tom Select pattern Simplify Site Settings page to focus on core site information Complete Phase 5: Multi-tenant authentication with login flow and site selection Add route query parameter rule and synchronize filename validation logic Fix critical bug in UpdateNpmCommand causing missing JavaScript stubs Implement filename convention rule and resolve VS Code auto-rename conflict Implement js-sanitizer RPC server to eliminate 900+ Node.js process spawns Implement RPC server architecture for JavaScript parsing WIP: Add RPC server infrastructure for JS parsing (partial implementation) Update jqhtml terminology from destroy to stop, fix datagrid DOM preservation Add JQHTML-CLASS-01 rule and fix redundant class names Improve code quality rules and resolve violations Remove legacy fatal error format in favor of unified 'fatal' error type Filter internal keys from window.rsxapp output Update button styling and comprehensive form/modal documentation Add conditional fly-in animation for modals Fix non-deterministic bundle compilation 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
emoji-regex 
emoji-regex offers a regular expression to match all emoji symbols (including textual representations of emoji) as per the Unicode Standard.
This repository contains a script that generates this regular expression based on the data from Unicode v12. Because of this, the regular expression can easily be updated whenever new emoji are added to the Unicode standard.
Installation
Via npm:
npm install emoji-regex
In Node.js:
const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex');
// Note: because the regular expression has the global flag set, this module
// exports a function that returns the regex rather than exporting the regular
// expression itself, to make it impossible to (accidentally) mutate the
// original regular expression.
const text = `
\u{231A}: ⌚ default emoji presentation character (Emoji_Presentation)
\u{2194}\u{FE0F}: ↔️ default text presentation character rendered as emoji
\u{1F469}: 👩 emoji modifier base (Emoji_Modifier_Base)
\u{1F469}\u{1F3FF}: 👩🏿 emoji modifier base followed by a modifier
`;
const regex = emojiRegex();
let match;
while (match = regex.exec(text)) {
const emoji = match[0];
console.log(`Matched sequence ${ emoji } — code points: ${ [...emoji].length }`);
}
Console output:
Matched sequence ⌚ — code points: 1
Matched sequence ⌚ — code points: 1
Matched sequence ↔️ — code points: 2
Matched sequence ↔️ — code points: 2
Matched sequence 👩 — code points: 1
Matched sequence 👩 — code points: 1
Matched sequence 👩🏿 — code points: 2
Matched sequence 👩🏿 — code points: 2
To match emoji in their textual representation as well (i.e. emoji that are not Emoji_Presentation symbols and that aren’t forced to render as emoji by a variation selector), require the other regex:
const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex/text.js');
Additionally, in environments which support ES2015 Unicode escapes, you may require ES2015-style versions of the regexes:
const emojiRegex = require('emoji-regex/es2015/index.js');
const emojiRegexText = require('emoji-regex/es2015/text.js');
Author
| Mathias Bynens |
License
emoji-regex is available under the MIT license.